Welcome

This group is extremely knowledgeable, and helpful. Professional, patient, produces results.

Geoff & Julie Hawksworth, Owners | Micro Kickboard

You can actually talk to them when you have a problem!

Miles Underwood, President | Underwood Distributing

Corporate Conversions exceeded my expectations in designing and developing my website. They are professional and provide a great insight on how marketing your business.

Kyla Bos, Owner | Ladi Bos & Daughters

Response times are quick and this group is easy and friendly to work with.

Mandy Tomich, Director | Michigan Association of Orthodontists

I was entirely happy with Corporate Conversions customer responsiveness and project outcome. I am a "neophyte" when it comes to understanding Google and the web, so I especially appreciated the patience that was shown.

Ray Davies, Entrepreneur

Good reliable service, very well trained and experienced. We're a longtime, satisfied client.

Dick Rolfe, President | The Dove Foundation

Prompt, Courteous, Knowledgeable!

Tom & Deb Ham, Owners | Automotive Management Network

Corporate Conversions have been very responsive and helpful whenever we have needed assistance. They are knowledgeable in what they do and a pleasure to work with.

Mark Baker, Owner | Real Estate Leadership Academy

Corporate Conversions has done a terrific job of handling the tech side of our website—platform, links, appearance, shopping cart, SEO, mobile, and all the other aspects that we don't understand or have time to tackle.

Social media can be both a blessing and a curse. From a personal standpoint, it can be very engrossing and entertaining. In fact, the average American user spends 3.2 hours per day on social media with young people and women spending even more time. That means that average American is on social media one quarter of the time she is awake. That’s a lot of time! And if the average American utilizes social media that much, imagine how much time social media managers must spend.

People who work with social media on behalf of themselves or their companies know what a potential time drain the internet is and how, taking just a casual approach to finding and sharing things with followers or friends, entire days can be lost to this void. Fortunately, there are better strategies not only to find interesting content to share, but to schedule and post it as well.

Previously we discussed why your company should be marketing to Millennials, and in this blog, we’ll talk about the group of people aging into that favorable demographic with real buying potential: Generation X, as well as how to target your marketing to them.

While the focus of the media for years was the Baby Boomer generation, and currently it’s obsessed with the Millennials, Generation X, sandwiched between these two important demographics, has 61 million members and makes up 27% of the adult population. They also head up 30% of U.S. households - which means any business that ignores them does so at its peril.

Generally speaking, the way Google and other search engines have been designed up until this point is to reward websites by their popularity. That is, the more a website is linked to, the higher its ranking is - even when the content on that site is erroneous. In a sense, this is not all that different from how other information is disseminated. Crackpot theories have always had an audience. But Google wants to turn that paradigm upside down and reward for truthfulness instead with its new Knowledge Vault.

How mobile friendly is your company’s website? Do you know? If you don’t, in short order you will find out because next Tuesday, April 21, Google is releasing its updated algorithm which is designed to place mobile-accommodating sites higher in its search rankings.

This may sound like it’s not much to worry about. After all, website traffic from mobile phones and tablets is hardly a new thing. In fact, in 2014 global internet traffic from mobile devices finally overtook traffic from desktops and mobile searches currently make up approximately 30% of all searches - which means that businesses with mobile unfriendly websites were already suffering from a natural decrease in traffic. But Google’s mission here is to create a better internet for the mobile user by actively penalizing companies who do not update their websites for mobile so this algorithm update is a carrot/stick approach. There will be more carrots for companies with sites that comply, and companies with sites that do not will take a beating.